McFarland, Nancy Irene Tuesday, December 22, 2020
Nancy McFarland
Nancy Irene McFarland, 87, of Signal Mountain, Tennessee, died peacefully at home on December 20, 2020, in the care of her family after battling atypical Parkinsonism for several years.
Known affectionately as “Nanny” to her family and friends, she was born in Cloquet, Minnesota on May 26, 1933 to Walter and Irene Peterson. She lived most of her life in Texas but moved to Signal Mountain two years ago. In Texas, she had worked as a secretary in the College of Veterinary Medicine at Texas A&M University. Nanny was an avid reader who loved to bake cookies, needlepoint, and travel; however, what brought her great happiness was being with her family, whom she cherished and adored until the day she died. She was a wonderful wife, mother, and grandmother. Being an interesting, kind, compassionate, and caring person, Nanny had many friends – to know her was to love her.
https://www.hangthecensors.com/482744.html (Natural News) As people around the world line up to get the Pfizer COVID-19 vaccine, there is one potential issue that is being largely glossed over and that is the alarming evidence in the vaccine trials of pathogenic priming in older adults, which means that vaccinated people could still get the disease and may actually end up getting even sicker from it.
In the early 2000s when vaccines were being developed against coronaviruses such as SARS-COV-1 and MERS, animal testing on the most promising vaccines seemed positive at first as the animals all developed strong antibody responses to the virus. However, when these vaccinated animals were exposed to the wild virus, it went far differently, with the vaccinated animals experiencing hyper-immune responses that cause inflammation throughout their bodies and particularly in their lungs.
Discovery Green celebrates Houston’s unsung heroes in tree projections
The tree trunks are strung with festive white holiday lights, but Craig Walsh s projection effects are so eerie some people may want to run the other way.
Molly Glentzer December 14, 2020Updated: December 15, 2020, 1:41 pm
Faces are projected onto the trees that are the winter art installation Monuments at Discovery Green Thursday, Dec. 10, 2020 in Houston. The work, designed by Australian artist Craig Walsh, features giant slow-motion video projections of unsung Houston heroes who were nominated by the public onto the canopies of five trees at the park. Photo: Brett Coomer, Houston Chronicle / Staff photographer
As the holidays get closer, healthcare professionals are choosing to decorate a little differently this year.
In fact, many are using PPE to dress up their Christmas trees as the U.S. continues to fight the coronavirus.
Many offices appear to be decorating their trees like the health professionals themselves, with face shields and masks at the top and blown-up latex gloves where hands would be.
Captains Way Dentistry West in Knoxville, Tennessee, posted a picture of its Christmas tree decorated like one of the staff including holding a toothbrush in one of its glove hands with the caption: “O PPE, O PPE, how germ-free are thy branches!”
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